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Business from the cloud up are you ready for the future breaking down barriers and entering industries

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Start-ups using technology to upend an established industry is an ongoing process of advancement and disruption, but is it possible to predict which established industry will be next?. W

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As most of us know, cheaper computers and widespread access

to the Internet tore down traditional barriers to entering the

retail sector Online shopping, with its economies of scale and

sharply reduced requirement for physical infrastructure, allowed new

businesses to enter the retail industry and challenge the relevance of

the high street and shopping centres, revolutionising consumer habits

in the process

Start-ups using technology to upend an established industry is an

ongoing process of advancement and disruption, but is it possible

to predict which established industry will be next? Victor Basta, the

managing director of Magister Advisors, a boutique mergers and

acquisitions consultancy, suggests looking to the businesses that have

a completely different model of working in an established sector

Mr Basta points to Wonga, the payday loans company With an annual

percentage rate (APR) of more than 4,000%, it is portrayed as preying

on the financially vulnerable—those who run out of money before the

end of the month and who turn to expensive providers of short-term

loans However, its success comes from fulfilling a need that traditional

banking does not “What’s the last great analogue market?” he asks

“It’s cash.”

The founder of Wonga, Errol Damelin, rejected the traditional approach

to applying for credit—talking to your bank—in favour of developing

an algorithm that gathers up to 8,000 data points from a variety of

sources, including social media accounts, and that returns a yes or no

answer to the applicant within seconds, with no humans involved in

the process at all

When it pays to be disruptive

Wonga is just one example of a business that has leveraged technology

to be disruptive in the financial space More broadly, payments are ripe for disruption, Mr Basta says—despite the fact that the process has already started “Payments have been disrupted for a very long time— but not really

“PayPal is the first company anyone thinks of—but PayPal is notoriously inefficient: it’s not famous for innovation and it’s late to mobile.” Micropayments are an area that will further eat into the services now provided—unsatisfactorily—by banks

Square, a technology start-up backed by Jack Dorsey, one of the founders of Twitter, is just one business providing a way for small retailers, from jumble sales to sole traders, to accept credit-card payments without spending a fortune acquiring credit-card terminals from the big providers

Square gives merchants a card reader that plugs into a smartphone or tablet and swipes the purchaser’s card for a flat fee of 2.75%, while the associated app provides analytics to the retailer

Founded in 2009, Square now says that it is processing some US$10bn

in transactions every year, and, crucially, makes it easy for both the retailer and the customer

In payments, as in retail, successful disruption is the result of focusing

on consumers and making things as frictionless as possible for them: from Amazon’s one-click payment, making buying goods quick and easy, to Wonga providing easy to access emergency funds “We’re down

to one-button payment,” Mr Basta says “The next step is zero-button payment Payments will be truly disrupted when you can walk into Starbucks, grab a coffee and leave”—in other words, when you don’t have to do anything at all to initiate the payment and it just happens

spotting the break in the cloud

Cloud computing will increasingly be at the heart of disruptive businesses Companies can in effect rent their IT infrastructure, lowering the costs of entry for start-ups and allowing companies

to scale IT more flexibly, according to growth and demand Netflix, which started life by renting DVDs by post—in itself disrupting both cinemas and physical rental outlets—moved into the cloud to create its online movie streaming service, which in turn made it one of the forces disrupting the old “push” approach of broadcasting companies Netflix and competitors such as LoveFilm and iTunes have benefited from and driven the growth in video consumption However, they could face disruption themselves as video consumption moves off the sofa: comScore, which provides insights based on metrics, noted that last year the mobile audience for video rose by 262% At present, mobile video is held back by bandwidth constraints, but as 4G connectivity becomes more widespread, the appetite for watching video on the

breaking doWn barriers and entering industries

picking the next industries to be disrupted by technology

Written by the Economist Intelligence Unit

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move is set to rise sharply.

Mobile gaming too should get a big boost from 4G—and it is here

that Mr Basta points to another industry that is ripe for tech-aided

disruption The companies that provide casual games to mobile device

platforms and social networks such as Facebook have found monetising

casual games very difficult As consumers are generally reluctant to

pay for games upfront, these companies have had to find other ways to

monetise their products

One proven way of getting gamers spending money is in-app purchases

of items such as better weapons, power-ups and virtual money Juniper

Research predicted in February that gamers using tablets will spend

more than US$3bn by 2016, up from the US$301m spent by gamers in

2012

However, it is the advertising industry that Mr Basta has in his sights

when it comes to mobile gaming Here, new providers are moving

into the space traditionally occupied by advertising companies to

develop highly targeted in-game advertising Berlin-based SponsorPay

develops in-game advertising across platforms for publishers including

Zynga and Ubisoft Advertisers include huge brands such as Samsung

and Coca-Cola As 4G takes off, the problems of low bandwidth and slow connections that have held back the development of this kind of advertising “will be non-issues”, Mr Basta says

enjoy it While it lasts

As technology continues to advance, the timeframe that established players have to enjoy industry dominance is shortening Once upon

a time, personal computers offered cheap, standardised hardware, throwing the mainframe business into disarray, but they have in turn faced disruption as PC sales decline and tablets and mobile devices take their place

Now, even newer industries are being upended Satellite navigation, for instance, has been disrupted by the growth of smartphones: the likes of TomTom and Garmin have seen their business eroded as map apps have become standard on the mobile phones we all carry with us, meaning there is no need for an extra, dedicated device

Yesterday’s disruptive businesses are today’s big hitters—and should keep an eye on who is innovating underneath them

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